Introduction to Drama
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Transcript Introduction to Drama
GREEK DRAMA
Public Ritual and Spectacle
from … SCHOLES
ROMANCE
TRAGEDY
COMEDY
SATIRE
WHAT IS DRAMA?
Greek meaning: “to do” or “to act”
= poetry + prose + fictional narrative
No narrator to offer meaning or interpretation (limited
views
Performance = play / text = play
No two productions are the same
performance is dynamic
THE GREEKS
Drama’s roots in ancient religious festivals
Stories about the gods (ex: Dionysius)
Theatre festival: full day event with critical audiences.
Thesis (“Thespians”) wins play competition in 534 BCE
Tragedy … from
tragos = “goat”
tragedy =“goat song”
THE GREEKS
cont’d
Only 3 speaking actors on stage at once
protagonist, deuteragonist, tritagonist
3 unities: time, place, action
24 hours
1 setting
1 plot: no comic relief or sub-plot
Chorus
reminds us that men do not have complete control
Sometimes strophe and antistrophe
Choryphaeus
chorus leader who delivers lines of spoken verse
on behalf of the chorus as a whole
THE GREEKS
Aristotle on tragedy
drama should “imitate nature”
Hamartia (hero’s error of judgement due to
ignorance or moral shortcoming)
leads to
Peripeteia (reversal of fortune) leads to
Anagnorisis (moment of self recognition) leads to
Catharsis (audience purgation of emotions: “pity
and fear”)
THE GREEK STAGE
Theatres (usually) situated on a hill
(amphitheatre) outdoors
Skene (“scene”)=
1-storey structure used to store costumes and for
entrances/exits
Scenes painted on the side
Orchestra =
Circular space (apprx 85 ‘ diameter) used as main acting
space
THE GREEK STAGE
FINAL THOUGHTS…
Public spectacle and ritual
The stage becomes a place where
our fears, anxieties and desires are
acted out
Psychological functionality: theatre
as therapy
Theatre critical: vehicle for social and
political commentary